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Ontario reports 826 COVID-19 cases, the third highest of the pandemic, with nine more deaths

Residents of Oakville and the rest of Halton Region will learn Monday if they’ll face new COVID-19 restrictions like a ban on indoor dining and shutdowns of gyms and theatres, says Premier Doug Ford.

“It’s concerning right now, we’re seeing the numbers go up again,” Ford said Friday as cases remained stubbornly high in several parts of the province were pushed into the modified Stage 2 measures.

There were 826 new infections across Ontario, but still the third highest since a on the eve of the Thanksgiving weekend.

Deaths have increased significantly from just a month ago, with nine more fatalities reported Friday — the third day in a row at that level. There have been 49 deaths in the last week, up from 34 in the previous seven days.

“We’re going to have to discuss that over the weekend,” Ford said of the situation in Halton, which he first flagged earlier this month.

“We’re going to discuss all the different regions where we see an escalation in cases.”

Hamilton, where there has been a super-spreader outbreak at a spinning studio, and the public health unit serving the Eastern Ontario region have previously been warned they could face restrictions to stop the spread of the virus.

While Halton had 34 new cases Friday, an increase from 29 the previous day, health authorities look at other indicators such as hospital and intensive care unit occupancy levels, and the percentage of people testing positive in making their decisions on new restrictions.

There were 292 new cases in Toronto, 186 in Peel, 87 in Ottawa and 72 in York Region. York was 2 restrictions on Monday. Durham had 38 cases Friday, up from 29 the previous day.

Hospitalizations continued to creep up across the province, rising by six patients to 276 with another four requiring intensive care for a total of 78, the highest since June 21. There were 47 ICU patients on ventilators to breathe.

One month ago there were just 88 patients in hospital for COVID-19, with 24 in ICUs and nine relying on ventilators to breathe for them.

Officials have warned that the ability of hospitals to perform non-emergency surgeries starts being impaired once 150 COVID-19 patients are in ICUs across the province, and becomes extremely difficult at 350.

There were 72 new cases in schools reported Friday, with 514 or just over 10 per cent of schools across the province experiencing cases in students and staff. Four schools were closed because of outbreaks.

is a Toronto-based reporter covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

‘I’m running out of ammunition.’ Peel’s medical officer of health looks at more curbs as region faces Ontario’s scariest COVID numbers

Peel’s medical officer of health is “running out of ammunition” to control the epidemic in his region and warns of further restrictions if the curve doesn’t begin to bend.

Dr. Lawrence Loh said additional “closures or curtailments” to reduce person-to-person interactions are being considered and may be implemented in the coming days if Peel’s daily COVID-19 cases remain the same or continue to rise.

The warning comes as Peel region reports a COVID-19 test positivity rate of 11.8 per cent — by far the highest in the province and more than double the provincial rate.

“We’re running out of time,” Loh told the Star. “I’m running out of ammunition.”

In the last two weeks, Loh has beyond provincial controls, including a ban on wedding receptions and social gatherings in businesses like banquet halls, and that could see employers face fines of $5,000 per day for not co-operating with outbreak investigations.

He has also repeatedly urged Peel residents to only leave home for essential reasons and to not socialize with anyone outside their household.

Yet the , putting hospitals, long-term-care homes and other vulnerable populations at risk, Loh said.

“We need people to hunker down over the next two to four weeks to cut down on the number of interactions,” he said. “But at a local level, I’m running out of ways to manage a decrease in the number of interactions in my community.”

Premier Doug Ford on Wednesday can be expected Friday for Peel, Toronto and York, saying “the virus is spreading at an alarming rate in these areas.”

Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie echoed Loh’s concerns at a Wednesday press conference and also hinted at further public health measures, saying Peel is facing a “sobering reality” with widespread COVID-19 transmission where “the virus is controlling us.”

Crombie said Mississauga’s current test positivity rate shows nearly eight per cent of COVID-19 test are coming back positive. She also pointed to a rise in COVID-19 hospitalizations in Peel and the growing number of outbreaks in congregate settings as among her top concerns.

Peel currently has 11 long-term-care homes, five retirement homes and four group homes in outbreak, Crombie said. One long-term-care home currently has more than 90 residents and 60 staff who have tested positive for the virus, she said.

At Trillium Health Partners, the two-hospital system is nearing capacity and is caring for 42 patients with suspected COVID-19 and 60 confirmed COVID-positive patients, 12 of whom are in intensive care, she said.

“That’s 114 rooms being used for just COVID,” she said, adding that staff are preparing for more cases, and that while elective surgeries have not yet been cancelled that prospect is “a growing concern.”

Crombie called the situation at William Osler Health System, which includes Brampton Civic Hospital, “even more dire,” saying the hospital is in gridlock with a total of 120 patients who are COVID-positive or who are awaiting COVID tests.

Osler president and CEO Dr. Naveed Mohammad said the hospital system is facing less pressure this week after starting on Nov. 6, and postponing some elective outpatient surgeries at its Peel Memorial Centre for Integrated Health and Wellness.

“We are holding our head above water but we’ve had to manage and move things around on a day-by-day basis,” he said. He added that he shares Loh’s concern about Peel’s local epidemic and supports Peel Public Health’s recent additional measures and restrictions.

Mohammad said the recent small drop in COVID-19 cases in Peel might be related to the three-day closure of one of Brampton’s busiest testing centres after it was damaged in a weekend windstorm. The centre, which reopened Wednesday, typically processes more than 600 tests a day, with a recent test positivity rate of 19.8 per cent.

“Even though we transferred some people to Peel Memorial (to be tested), some of the lower case numbers in the last couple days may have been the result of that testing centre’s temporary closure. My fear is that because we were hampered for the last three or four days, cases may have been artificially low.”

At a Wednesday morning press conference, Loh said there are nearly 2,000 active COVID-19 cases in Brampton, with the city adding 200 new cases a day.

“This deeply concerns me. If even 10 per cent of those individuals require hospitalization our hospitals will continue to be challenged.”

On Friday, Peel Public Health abandoned some aspects of its contact tracing after facing a growing backlog of new cases, Loh said. Since mid-October, shore up its tracing but even that wasn’t enough to keep up, he said.

The new streamlined process, which focuses on high-risk exposures and asks some people to notify their own close contacts, is reaching people with new COVID-19 infections more quickly and has cut the backlog by 30 per cent, Loh said.

Colin Furness, an infection-control epidemiologist at the University of Toronto, said Peel creates the perfect storm for COVID-19 with its high proportion of large households, and some areas of the region densely populated with essential workers.

“It is not about local public health leadership and it’s not about residents not caring,” he said. “We knew by May where COVID spreads and how COVID spreads. We could have, as a province, taken steps with increased mobile testing and community engagement, and the province didn’t.”

Furness suggested it might be time for Peel to ask the federal government for more supports, beyond the voluntary it committed to earlier this month, rather than wait for provincial help.

Loh said he wrote a letter two weeks ago to Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, Dr. David Williams, to highlight that paid sick leave “would be a significant assistance to reducing transmission” in Peel region.

The Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area mayors and chairs on Tuesday said more supports are needed to ensure workers without sick-pay benefits can be tested for COVID-19 without fear of losing income.

Crombie on Wednesday told reporters that Peel has had 116 workplace outbreaks since September and currently has 80 active workplace investigations. Crombie said she is calling on all levels of government and all private sector leaders to come together to “find a way to give workers confidence so that they won’t be penalized for getting tested, getting sick or self-isolating to stop the spread of COVID-19.”

With files from Ed Tubb

Megan Ogilvie is a Toronto-based health reporter for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

‘Alarming’ new national COVID-19 projections due Friday as questions swirl about vaccine delivery

OTTAWA—Federal public health officials are expected to release “alarming” new COVID-19 projections Friday — modelling numbers that were presented to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Opposition party leaders in a rare joint briefing Thursday.

“Given the numbers” it was important for the other party leaders to hear the projections first-hand, to “seize the situation” and to have a chance to ask questions directly of federal public health advisers, Drs. Theresa Tam and Howard Njoo, said a senior government official speaking on background.

“All parties should be aware of the latest developments and what’s coming clearly in the next few weeks,” said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the meeting, which combined in-person and virtual participants.

Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh and Green Leader Annamie Paul attended the briefing, while Bloc Leader Yves-François Blanchet dispatched his House leader Alain Therrien.

One source later said that the modelling showed Canada could hit 60,000 new daily cases in December if Canadians increase their contacts, 20,000 cases if people maintain current rates of social interaction, and 10,000 only if they move quickly to reduce contacts. The source said that grimmest projection did not include key variables, including an effective reproductive number.

Tam last week had warned that the country could hit 10,000 new daily cases in December.

In a statement released after the meeting, O’Toole said later that what struck him was that 11 months in, “after thousands of lives and millions of jobs have been lost, and hundreds of billions of dollars has been added to the national debt, we as a country are worse off than we were at the start of the pandemic.”

He placed the blame for that squarely on Trudeau’s government for failing to deliver rapid tests, to give Canadians clear information to make decisions and to provide a clear vaccine plan.

The government official said they discussed modelling numbers, vaccines, long-term-care homes, schools, rapid tests, international factors in Canada’s pandemic, and interprovincial travel. The official denied the goal was to get other party leaders on board with the government’s public health message.

It comes in a week when the Opposition has pushed Trudeau hard on the Liberals’ COVID-19 response, especially on Ottawa’s vaccine distribution plans.

But much of that road map is still being worked out.

At Queen’s Park, Health Minister Christine Elliott reiterated that Ontario is expecting to receive 40 per cent of Canada’s initial allotment of four million doses of the Pfizer vaccine and two million doses of the Moderna vaccine — numbers she said were given by the federal government but which Trudeau declined to confirm Thursday “until we have much more certainty around them.”

“We do expect on that to be receiving 1.6 million doses of the Pfizer product and 800,000 of the Moderna product,” Elliott told reporters Thursday.

The minister said the province “has a detailed group that’s working within the Ministry of Health to deal with the physical logistics,” such as safely storing the serum at low temperatures.

“Then there are also the issues about who should receive the first vaccines,” she said, noting the committee’s work is well under way.

Elliott said “there are people from the ethics tables that are also going to be on this committee to figure out what is the most fair and equitable way of distributing the vaccine.”

Trudeau said only that there are “many ongoing preliminary discussions around our plan to unfold, to rollout vaccines and deliver them across the country.”

Ottawa’s role is to co-ordinate the global purchase and front-end delivery of vaccines to provinces.

So far, the federal government has shortlisted four companies that specialize in providing logistics services.

The federal government will soon decide whether to further invite them to compete for the job of co-ordinating the delivery of vaccines, or whether it will simply select one or more to do the work.

That decision was expected to be made by Nov. 23, but seems certain to be delayed to late November, said another official who spoke on a background-only basis.

Additionally, the federal government has bought 126 freezers — made by Panasonic and Thermal Scientific — to boost existing federal freezer capacity to store anticipated COVID-19 vaccine supplies, once approved by Health Canada.

Of the 126, 26 are “ultracold” and can store vaccines at minus 80C, and 100 are freezers that provide minus 20C. Ottawa says that means it has secured freezer capacity for about approximately 33.5 million “ultra-frozen” and frozen vaccines.

Federal officials who answered questions from the Star downplayed the need for additional help from the private sector or other Canadian companies which in the past week stepped up to offer to mobilize to assist with the daunting logistics of providing cold-chain storage for the vaccine.

The federal government plans now to work only through the four companies on the shortlist.

Those companies may subcontract portions of the work, but all have guaranteed they’ll be able to provide end-to-end support for vaccine delivery.

Pfizer’s is the only vaccine candidate, among the seven for which Canada has purchase contracts, that requires “ultracold” storage temperatures.

Moderna, the second company to report its RNA-based vaccine candidate shows a 94.5 per cent efficacy rate, has less stringent cold storage requirements.

Canada has purchased 20 million doses of each.

It’s not clear which vaccine or vaccines will first cross the finish line at the Health Canada regulatory agency before they will be allowed to be distributed.

Tam has said some vaccines could become available in early January, within six or seven weeks.

Tonda MacCharles is an Ottawa-based reporter covering federal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Robert Benzie is the Star’s Queen’s Park bureau chief and a reporter covering Ontario politics. Follow him on Twitter:

‘It was huge’: Orillia restaurateur on impact of relief program

The Common Stove had only just opened in downtown Orillia when the global pandemic brought the world to a halt.

“We got going pretty hard and fast and then we were shut down pretty hard and fast two weeks later,” co-owner Simon MacRae told Simcoe.com.

For the next three months, the restaurant offered takeout — not an ideal scenario for a newly opened business but a necessary one.

“Obviously, the revenue was going to be less, but we had quite a good customer base who supported us during that period,” MacRae said.

The Common Stove began offering outdoor dining in mid-June and six weeks later welcomed indoor diners.

During this challenging period the restaurant was able to access financial assistance through the Orillia Area Community Development Corporation (CDC), courtesy of an investment by Ottawa via its regional relief and recovery fund.

“It was huge,” MacRae said of the impact. “There were obviously a fair number of expenses incurred in getting set up for outdoor dining, which was not something we’d immediately planned for at that point,” he said.

Reconfiguring the restaurant to ensure adequate social distancing and necessary safety measures were in place also brought expenses, he noted.

“It was very helpful to have that funding to help us do that,” MacRae added.

Launched in May to help businesses stay afloat as they confront the impacts of COVID-19, the fund provides loans to those who may not be eligible for other programs.

In the Orillia area, the community development corporation through the federal program provided $995,000 in loans to help 30 local businesses cover fixed operating costs and maintain jobs.

A quarter of the amount loaned is forgivable if the remainder is repaid within a set period.

“A lot of people just need a little piece of mind and some liquidity support to get through what’s going on,” Wendy Timpano, the CDC’s general manager, told Simcoe.com.

The organization now has an additional $1 million through the federal funding program to distribute to eligible businesses in Orillia, Oro-Medonte, Severn, Ramara, and Rama.

The agency is focusing on assisting businesses with loans of up to $40,000.

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